Current:Home > ContactNew York AG seeks legal sanctions against Trump as part of $250M lawsuit -Wealth Momentum Network
New York AG seeks legal sanctions against Trump as part of $250M lawsuit
View
Date:2025-04-18 22:04:55
New York Attorney General Letitia James on Tuesday asked a judge to impose legal sanctions against Donald Trump and the other defendants in her $250 million civil lawsuit against the former president and his company.
James last year brought the $250 million lawsuit against Trump, his children and his company that accuses them of "grossly" inflating the former president's net worth by billions of dollars and cheating lenders and others with false and misleading financial statements.
MORE: Trump inflated his net worth by $2.2 billion, New York AG says in filing
In her new court filing, James argues that Trump and the others deserve sanctions because they've made the same legal arguments the judge has repeatedly denied.
Since October 2022, the defendants have made the same arguments against the suit five separate times, the filing says. Three of those arguments have already been rejected by the courts, while two were filed in the past month and haven't been ruled on yet, according to the filing.
On Oct. 26, the court rejected the defendants' motion that the DA didn't have standing or capacity to bring the claims, the filing said. On Jan. 6, 2023, the court rejected the same arguments for a second time in the defendants' motion to dismiss the case, according to the filing. Then on June 27, the court rejected the same arguments in the defendants' appeal, the filing said.
The defendants then made the same arguments in filing for a summary judgment on Aug. 4 and in their opposition to the AG's partial motion for a summary judgment filed on Sept. 1, the filing said. Neither of those motions have been ruled on yet.
Trump has denied all wrongdoing.
veryGood! (423)
Related
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Chris Pine Reveals His Favorite Meme of Himself
- The 2024 Tesla Cybertruck takes an off-road performance test
- Few small popular SUVs achieve success in new crash prevention test aimed at reducing accident severity
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- BNSF becomes 2nd major railroad to sign on to anonymous federal safety hotline for some workers
- Body believed to be that of trucker who went missing in November found in Iowa farm field
- Detroit-area man charged with manslaughter in fatal building explosion
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Nick and Aaron Carter doc announced by 'Quiet on Set' network: See the trailer
Ranking
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- GOP mulls next move after Kansas governor vetoes effort to help Texas in border security fight
- Kendra Wilkinson’s 14-Year-Old Son Hank Looks All Grown Up in Rare Photo
- Alabama sets July execution date for man convicted of killing delivery driver
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- The Best Jean Shorts For Curvy Girls With Thick Thighs
- NCAA can't cave to anti-transgender hysteria and fear like NAIA did
- The economy grew a disappointing 1.6% in Q1. What does it mean for interest rates?
Recommendation
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Baseball boosted Japanese Americans during internment. A field in the desert may retell the story.
Tony Khan, son of Jaguars owner, shows up to NFL draft with neck brace. Here's why.
Tony Khan, son of Jaguars owner, shows up to NFL draft with neck brace. Here's why.
Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
Driver charged with negligent homicide in fiery crash that shut down Connecticut highway bridge
NFL draft order Friday: Who drafts when for second and third rounds of 2024 NFL draft
Harvey Weinstein timeline: The movie mogul's legal battles before NY conviction overturned